Immersive video is now accessible to just about anyone, both on the creator and audience side. Google just turned on 360-degree video uploads for YouTube creators, letting anyone who can film the immersive footage using something like the Bublcam
or Ricoh Theta the ability to put their creations on YouTube, where
they can be viewed in the YouTube for Android app or in Chrome (with
iPhone and iPad support coming soon). The best way to watch these is
probably with Cardboard or something equivalent for now, but with the
rapid growth of OEM interest in virtual reality and other immersive
viewing headsets, this YouTube update paves the way for a future in
which we watch from inside the online movie.The process is a little clunky at the moment, with a requirement that you run a Python script to ensure the correct metadata is applied to your video file to get YouTube to recognize the upload as a 360-degree clip, but YouTube says it’s working on automating that part of the process so that likely won’t apply for long.